OmarAshour Islamists and the Processes of Transformation
Transcript of OmarAshour Islamists and the Processes of Transformation
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Votes and Violence:
Islamists and
The Processes
of Transformation
Omar Ashour
November 2009
Developments in Radicalisation
and Political Violence
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Developments in Radicalisationand Political Violence
Developments in Radicalisation and Political Violence is a series of papers published by the International Centre
for the Study of Radicalisation and Political Violence (ICSR).
It features papers by leading experts, providing reviews of
existing knowledge and sources and/or novel arguments and
insights which are likely to advance our understanding of
radicalisation and political violence. The papers are written
in plain English. Authors are encouraged to spell out policy
implications where appropriate.
EditorProf. Harvey Rubin
University of Pennsylvania
Editorial AssistantsKatie Rothman
International Centre for the Study of
Radicalisation and Political Violence (ICSR)
Ryan Evans
International Centre for the Study ofRadicalisation and Political Violence (ICSR)
Editorial BoardProf. Sir Lawrence Freedman
King’s College London
Dr. Boaz Ganor
Interdisciplinary Center Herzliya
Dr. Peter Neumann
King’s College London
Yasar Qatarneh
Jordan Institute of Diplomacy
Contact All papers can be downloaded free of charge at
www.icsr.info. To order hardcopies, please write to mail@icsr.
info. For all matters related to the paper series, please write to:
ICSR, King’s College London, 138-142 StrandLondon WC2R 1HH, United Kingdom
© ICSR 2009
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Summary
As opposed to the common perception that Islamistmovements subscribe to a similar set of ideologies defying
behavioural and organisational change, there have been
multiple transformations that developed within many of these
movements, especially in the last quarter of the twentieth
century and early twenty rst century. These transformations
can be described as processes of change that are centered
on the stated positions of Islamist movements’ leaders relative
to their positions in the past, usually with respect to the two
issues of political violence and democracy. The processes ofchange within Islamist movements can take three possible
paths: the path of radicalisation, the path of moderation, or the
path of de-radicalisation. The paper is reviewing and analysing
the three processes of change within Islamist movements.
This paper is based on a chapter in Omar Ashour’s
recently published book The De-Radicalization of Jihadists:
Transforming Armed Islamist Movements. It has been
reproduced with the full permission of Routledge.
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About Omar Ashour
Omar Ashour is a Lecturer in the Politics of the Middle East
at the Institute of Arab and Islamic Studies, University ofExeter. He is the author of The Deradicalization of Jihadists:
Transforming Armed Islamist Movements, New York, London:
Routledge, 2009. He can be reached at [email protected]
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Votes and Violence:
Islamists andThe Processesof Transformation
“Permanent continuity is an impossibility” An Arab Proverb
Transformations within Islamism
As opposed to the common perception that Islamist
movements subscribe to a similar set of ideologies defying
behavioural and organisational change, there have been
remarkable transformations that developed within many
of these movements, especially in the last quarter of the
twentieth century. These transformations can be described as
processes of change that are centered on the stated positions
of Islamist movements’ leaders relative to their positions in
the past, usually with respect to the two issues of political
violence and democracy.1 The processes of change within
Islamist movements can take three possible paths: the path
of moderation, the path of radicalisation, or the path of de-
radicalisation.2
Generally, most of the studies on Islamist movements attempt
to explain the two processes of radicalisation (especially
violent radicalisation) and moderation (the positive attitudes
towards democracy and democratisation). The literature
on this addresses and debates the causes of radicalisation
since the late 1970’s.3 As for moderation, fewer works have
addressed the causes of that process as it is a relatively
1 Ashour (2009) p.112 Those processes will be dened in the following section.
3 Ibrahim (1980, 1982); Roy (1994); Esposito (1997); Anderson (1997); Fuller
(2002); Hafez (2000, 2004); Wiktorowicz (2004)
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recent development.4 More importantly, the reasons behind
renouncing violence (behavioural de-radicalisation) and de-
legitimising it (ideological de-radicalisation) have not been
sufciently investigated in the literature, with the exception of afew recent studies.5
The focus of this article will be reviewing the three processes
of change (radicalisation, moderation and de-radicalisation)
within Islamist movements. I start by analysing the studies
on radicalisation in Islamist movements. This is followed by
a review of studies on moderation processes within these
groups. That discussion is followed by highlighting a gap in the
literature when it comes to Islamist de-radicalisation.
What are We Talking about?
Radicalisation, De-Radicalisation and Moderation are
processes of relative change within Islamist movements that
can occur on the ideological and/or the behavioural levels,
evenly or unevenly across issue areas. The three processes
are centered on changes in the stated positions and views
of Islamist leaders and groups on political violence and
democracy relative to their positions in the past.
Radicalisation
Radicalisation is a process of relative change in which a group
undergoes ideological and/or behavioural transformations
that lead to the rejection of democratic principles (including
the peaceful alternation of power and the legitimacy of
ideological and political pluralism), demands for revolutionary
sociopolitical, socioeconomic, and cultural changes, and
possibly to the utilisation of violence, or to an increase in
the levels of violence, to achieve political goals. Examples
of increasing the levels of violence would be expanding the
4 The moderation processes started to be “institutionalized” in the late 1990s
– most notably in Egypt with the ofcial split of the Muslim Brothers and the
Wasat Party in 1996 and in Turkey with the Justice and Development Party
breaking away from the Virtue Party in 2001. Wickham (2004); Clark (2006);Schwedler (2006)
5 Ashour (2007); International Crisis Group (2007); Ashour (2008); Ashour (2009);
Bjore and Horgan (2009).
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selection of targets to include civilians, indiscriminate violence
and, in techniques, suicide bombings.6
De-Radicalisation
De-radicalisation is another process of relative change
within Islamist movements, one in which a radical group
reverses its ideology and de-legitimises the use of violent
methods to achieve political goals, while also moving towards
an acceptance of gradual social, political and economic
changes within a pluralist context. A group undergoing a de-
radicalisation process does not have to ideologically abide
by democratic principles – whether electoral or liberal, anddoes not have to participate in an electoral process.7 De-
radicalisation is primarily concerned with changing the attitudes
of armed Islamist movements towards violence, rather than
toward democracy. Many de-radicalised groups still uphold
misogynist, homophobic, xenophobic, and anti-democratic
views.
Separate from the ideological level, de-radicalisation can occur
only on the behavioural level. On that level, de-radicalisation
means practically abandoning the use of violence to achieve
political goals without a concurrent process of ideological de-
legitimisation of violence. De-radicalisation can occur in only
one of the two levels.
Finally, there is also a third level of de-radicalisation. Following
the declaration of ideological and/or behavioural de-
radicalisation by the leadership of an armed group(s), there is
usually the challenge of organisational de-radicalisation: the
dismantlement of the armed units of the organisation, which
includes discharging/demobilising their members without splits,
mutiny or internal violence.
6 For instance, the methods utilized by the Algerian Armed Islamic Group (GIA)
after 1994 exemplify increasing the level of violence.
7 An example would be the Egyptian Islamic Group which – based on theirinterpretation of Islam – still rejects democracy. However, their newly
developed ideology de-legitimizes violence and accepts ‘the other’ – not
necessarily as an ‘enemy’.
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Moderation
Finally, moderation is a process of relative change within
Islamist movements that is mainly concerned with the attitudesof these movements towards democracy. Moderation can
take place on two levels: on the ideological level, where the
key transformation is the acceptance of democratic principles,
most importantly the legitimacy of pluralism and the peaceful
alternation of power. On the behavioural level, the key
transformation is participation in electoral politics (if allowed).
Different levels of moderation can occur within both non-violent
radical and moderate8 Islamist movements unevenly and across
issue areas.
On Radicalisation: Structural-Psychological Approaches Versus Political Process
The literature on the causes of radicalisation can be divided
into two broad approaches: the structural-psychological9
and the social movement approaches. Following Ted Gurr’s
seminal book Why Men Rebel (1970), the classic models of
the structural-psychological approach posit ‘a linear causal
relationship in which [socio-structural] strains produce
psychological discomfort which, in turn, produces collective
action’.10 Scholars and experts have introduced several
types of socio-structural strains and debated their relative
importance. The four main types are socioeconomic, identity-
based, cultural, and political.
Structural-Psychological Approaches:Socioeconomics?
Ibrahim (1980, 1996), Ansari (1984), Zubaida, (1989),
Anderson (1991), Ayubi (1991), Tessler (1997) and others
have emphasized the importance of socioeconomic factors
in explaining the psychological alienation and, therefore,
radicalisation of Islamist activists. Their arguments mainly
8 An example of a higher level of moderation is accepting liberal democracy asopposed to electoral democracy.
9 Also referred to as ‘frustration-aggression’ models
10 Wiktorowicz (2004) p. 6
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recycle relative deprivation models11 to argue that Islamist
movements represent modern reactions to rapid urbanisation,
overpopulation, unemployment, poverty, marginalisation
of lower/lower-middle classes and visible minorities,skewed income distribution, and corrupt elites. Given these
socioeconomic strains, disenfranchised youth seek radical
changes through protest and, in some cases, violent struggle.12
As shown by the scholars who uphold this approach, there
is some empirical support to socioeconomic explanations
of radicalisation. The works within this category have shown
indicators that membership in Islamist movements are partially
correlated with socioeconomic dislocations, including poverty,income inequalities, and lack of basic social services.13 Several
case-studies support this line of argument. These cases include
the Armed Islamic Group (GIA) membership in Algeria and
France,14 and al-Takfr wa al-Hijra case in Egypt.15
Still, there are several problems with these socioeconomic
explanations. First, they fail to answer the question ‘why
Islamism?’ These socioeconomically disenfranchised
individuals and groups could have chosen ideologies that
directly address their grievances, like Marxism. Instead these
individuals chose to rally around Islamist symbols and gures.
Given that, socioeconomic explanations do not adequately
capture the socio-cultural dimension of radical Islamism.
In addition, when these explanations are tested empirically,
there is usually a selective focus on the socioeconomically
disenfranchised members and leaders of a specic radical
group. Therefore, these explanations do not adequately answer
the question of why do members of the upper and upper-
middle classes get radicalised.16 After all, both Osama Bin
Laden and Ayman al-Zawahri are members of the Saudi and
11 Gurr (1970)
12 Tessler (1997); Ibrahim (1980, 1996)
13 Davis (1984); Dekmejian (1988)
14 Tessler (1997)
15 Ibrahim (1980)
16 Although relative deprivation theory explicitly addresses the issue of upper
class expectations and discontents, the literature on Islamist radicalizationtends to focus on lower classes, and therefore advances the notion that
absolute deprivation and poverty causes social alienation followed by
radicalization. See, for example Davis (1984), Dekmejian (1988).
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Egyptian upper classes respectively. Further, none of the 19
hijackers of 9/11 belonged to the lower classes.17 Due to that
selective focus, socioeconomic explanations fail to provide a
general framework to explain the causes of radicalisation ofIslamist movements.
Structural-Psychological Approaches: Identity?
Other scholars have argued for the relative importance of
identity politics in explaining Islamist radicalisation.18 Their
arguments attempt to explain radicalisation as a reaction to the
growing inuence of Western and other non-Islamic culturesin predominantly Muslim societies, diasporas, or communities.
The primary hypothesis of these arguments is that Islamists
will uphold radical religious and religio-national identities
in response to what they perceive as ‘cultural imperialism’.
That perception is usually bolstered by non-Muslim military
presence like in the Saudi Arabian, Iraqi, and Afghan cases, by
long colonial confrontations as in Algeria and Chechnya,19 by
losing ‘cultural values’, or by integration failures within Western
societies. Following this line of argument, radicalisation occurs
in a context, or during a process of, ‘cultural defence’.
Another identity-related approach, one that differs from the
cultural defense thesis,20 is the political culture argument. This
approach is based on two assumptions. The rst, like the
cultural defence approach, is that Muslims possess a strong
sense of religio-cultural identity that affects their behaviours
and worldviews.21 Following from that, the second assumption
is that Muslim political behaviour is inuenced by Islamic
scriptures and classics.22 Given the broadness and, sometimes,
17 Fouda (2005)
18 Kramer (1997); Burgat and Dowell (1997), Esposito (1997); Ibrahim (2004)
19 Kramer (1997); Fuller (2002)
20 This argument does not belong to structural-psychological approaches. I
mention it here due to its relation with the identity-based ‘cultural defense’
approach as well as due to the fact that it is common in the literature, media
and sometimes political rhetoric.
21 Sivan (1985); Lewis (1991)
22 Sivan (1985); Lewis (1991); This is the point where the two approaches differ.Whereas the cultural defense approach argues that radicalization occurs in
reaction to cultural imperialism, the political culture approach argues that
radicalism can be traced to, and legitimized by, classical Islamic scriptures.
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vagueness of these textual sources, radical interpretations of
them are usually an option. Thus, the political culture approach
argues that radicalism can be based on Islamic injunctions
and identities. Therefore, as opposed to cultural defence,radicalisation can occur without ‘cultural imperialism.’
Despite doing a superb job in addressing the salience of
cultural norms within Islamist politics, and despite being
common within some of the literature on Islamist movements
as well as much of the coverage by media outlets, there are
many problems with identity-based approaches. First, identity-
based explanations that invoke culture suffer from denitional
and methodological problems: such as dening culture andexplaining how it can be measured in an unbiased manner.23
In addition, there are several sweeping assumptions at the
core of the identity-based approaches. First, there is an
assumption that religio-national identities are always strong
among Muslims, not just with Muslims who support Islamist
movements. Following from that, there is another assumption
that political action is a natural derivative of these strong
religio-national identities and sentiments as well as religious
and ideological narratives. In other words, identity-based
approaches assume that there is a linear correlation between
identity and political behaviour, as well as scriptures and
political behaviour. More importantly, these approaches fail to
account for several empirical cases. For example, if identity
determines behaviour, why would an Islamist-leaning party like
the Justice and Development Party (AKP) relentlessly pursue
a European Union (EU) membership for Turkey, or why would
Iraqi24 and Afghan25 Islamist movements cooperate with the
US-led coalition and/or with NATO to overthrow nationalists or
Islamist regimes in their countries? It seems the identity-based
approach would predict very different behaviour by Islamist
actors than that exhibited in these episodes.
23 Hudson (1995) pp. 29-34
24 Like Supreme Islamic Council of Iraq, al-Da‘wa Party and, to a lesser extent,
the Islamic Party (Muslim Brothers in Iraq).
25 Like the Islamic Society led by the former president as well asMujahidiyn
leader Burhannudin Rabbani and the Islamic Union in Afghanistan led by
former Mujahidiyn leader, Abd Rabb al-Rasul Sayyaf. The Union is nowknown as the Islamic Call Organization. In addition, the Northern Alliance
that collaborated with the US to overthrow the Taliban in 2001 was mainly an
Islamist coalition, with a few exceptions within its ranks.
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Finally, recent empirical works on the relationship between
religiosity and political attitudes represent a challenge to these
identity-based approaches. Based on his surveys and empirical
research in four Arab countries, political scientist Mark Tesslerfound that ‘Islam appears to have less inuence on political
attitudes than is frequently suggested by students of Arab and
Islamic society’.26 To illustrate this, his study shows that there
is no statistically signicant relationship between attitudes
towards democracy and personal piety in Morocco and
Algeria.27
More problematic, especially with the political culture approach
given its emphasis on primordialism, is the constant failureto explain change within Islamist movements. Case studies
and comparative analyses have shown that many Islamist
political movements, whether radical or moderate, change
their ideologies, identities and behaviour over time.28 Then,
the problematic question for the political culture approach is:
if identities are primordial, classic scriptures do not change,
and Islamist movements strongly uphold both, why would
these groups change their behaviours, ideologies and therefore
radicalise, de-radicalise, or moderate?
Structural-Psychological Approaches: Politics?
A third approach within the literature on radicalisation argues
for the relative importance of political stress as a source of
psychological discomfort and alienation. Radicalisation is
perceived here as a reaction to predominant authoritarianism,
state repression, and forced exclusion.29 Francois Burgat best
illustrates this approach by arguing that any Western political
party could be turned into the GIA in weeks if it was subjected
to the same level of political repression that Islamists have
endured.30
26 Tessler (2002) p. 351
27 Ibid, p. 350
28 Ashour and Unluckayakli (2006); Ashour (2007, 2008, 2009); Voll (1992);
Entelis (1998); Roy (1994, 1999); Wickham (2002, 2004).29 Hudson (1995); Anderson (1997, 2000); Ibrahim (2002); Burgat (2002); Hafez
(2004)
30 Burgat (1997) p. 45
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There is strong empirical support for this particular type of
structural-psychological approach, most notably the cases
of the Muslim Brotherhood (MB) in Egypt31 (1954-1969), the
MB in Syria (1980s), the Islamic Salvation Front (FIS) in Algeria(1992-1997), the Islamic Renaissance Party (IRP) in Tajikistan
(1992-1997), and others. In these aforementioned cases,
the tendency to work within a democratic framework and/or
established state institutions did exist initially, and radicalisation
has occurred in response to exclusion and political repression.
Also, radical Islamist movements and ideologies which are
prone to violence were all born in authoritarian states during
highly repressive periods. Jihadism32 and Takrism33 were both
born in Egyptian political prisons where torture ranged from asystematic daily practice in some periods to a selective-but-
widespread practice in others.34 Mainstream Salasm, as we
understand it today, was developed in Saudi Arabia, another
country whose ruling regime has an inglorious human rights
record. The three exclusionary ideologies that guide almost all
violent Islamists were not born in a democratic country.
However, that is only one part of the whole puzzle. Similar
types of political strains on domestic groups have led to the
opposite effect: moderation. As opposed to the Algerian
scenario of a decade-long, bloody civil war, political pressures35
on Turkish Islamists in 1997 led to the moderation of their
31 The Egyptian MB is an interesting and rich case. Given 55 years of repression
and exclusion, it passed through phases of radicalization (1954-1969),
de-radicalization (1969-1973) and then moderation (1973 - Present).
32 The core of Jihadism stresses the use of violence as a legitimate, and in most
versions,the
legitimate, method of political and social change. Jihadistsmostly use selective and literal sala interpretations of Islamic sources and
hence the term “sala-jihadist.”
33 Takr (excommunication) is the act of accusing a Muslim of abandoning
Islam and becoming an unbeliever or an apostate ( murrtadd ). Based on
that concept, Takrism is an ideology whose basic assumption labels a
whole Muslim community (a village, a city, a country or the global Muslim
community) as indels/apostates, unless proven otherwise. This is the core
difference between Takrism and the rest of Islamist ideologies. This has
practical consequences. Takri groups can be violent or non-violent. If they
became violent, then there is usually a wide selection of targets from all
segments of the society, sometimes including women and children like the
case of the Algerian GIA after 1994.34 Ramadan (1993); Ra’if (1993. 2005).
35 The pressures however were by no means equivalent to the pressure tactics
employed in Algeria.
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rhetoric and behaviour.36 Political strains have led to similar
effects being witnessed in the cases of the Moroccan Justice
and Development Party (PJD), the Egyptian Wasat (Centre)
Party and the Tunisian al-Nahda (Renaissance) Party. Thus,while such political strains are necessary to radicalise a
movement, they are usually insufcient to do that on their own.
Additionally, radicalisation can occur within democracies,
as illustrated by ‘home-grown’ terrorist cases like the 7/7
bombings, several other bombing attempts in the UK, the
‘Toronto 17’ and the Khawaja cases in Canada,37 and others
in Europe and North America. Although the ideological
frameworks that legitimise violence were developed inauthoritarian states, the organisational and technical training to
execute violent action is also exported from such repressive or
failed states; the challenge to the political strains approach is
why there is a ‘will’ to execute political violence in democratic
societies, where there are other channels available to express
political grievances?
Relevant Arguments about Radicalisation
Finally, two arguments in the literature on the causes and
levels of radicalisation should be mentioned here. First, some
scholars have attempted to directly correlate the shape of
Islamist activism as well as the level of radicalism with the
intensity of the structural strains within the crisis environment.38
It would follow that the more severe the socioeconomic,
identity and/or political crises are, the higher the levels of
violent radicalism.39
The second argument is more recent and comes from
organisational theorists. The main hypothesis of this argument
is that the fundamental cause of violent adicalisation is
organisational.40 Based on some of the studies on ethnic
conict and failed states,41 organisational explanations are
36 Yavuz (2006); Ashour and Unlucayakli (2006).
37 9/11 was not included here since the terrorists were from outside the US,
although the radicalization of some of them occurred in Europe.
38 Dekmejian (1995) p. 6; Esposito (1992) pp. 12-17.39 The critique of this argument is discussed in the following section.
40 Rosa (2006) p. 3.
41 Fukuyama (2004); Mowle (2006); Rosa (2006); Marten (2007).
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based on the notion that both state and group factionalisation/
de-centralisation increase radicalisation. The state’s withdrawal
from its classic spheres of inuence,42 including providing
services and a monopoly over means of violence, allows radicalgroups to ll that vacuum and challenge the state. This state
withdrawal could be due to lack of capacity, will or both. On
the other side, factionalisation of radical groups is positively
correlated with an increase in the levels of violence that these
groups perpetrate.43 The empirical examples that are usually
cited to support this argument are the cases of al-Qa‘ida and
other smaller radical groups in Afghanistan, Iraq, and Somalia.
Whereas the organisational arguments can partially explainseveral cases of further radicalisation, they do not explain
the causes of this process. Many radical Islamist movements
were born in strong, centralised states like Egypt, Iran, and
Saudi Arabia. Factionalisation and de-centralisation have
only affected these groups in a secondary stage. ‘Failed
states’ acted as facilitating grounds, mainly for mobilisation,
recruitment, training and resource gathering (like the case of
Afghanistan), but not as a cause behind the initial radicalisation
of the group.
Structural-Psychological Approaches: Are They ReallyThat Useful?
In the literature on social movements, stark criticism is
levelled against the structural-psychological models.44 The
same critiques are relevant to the study of radical Islamist
movements. One of the main critiques is that structural strains,
regardless of their versions (socioeconomic, political, identity-
based), are ubiquitous to all societies but they do not always
lead to violent radicalism. On the contrary, poorer societies
coupled with repressive regimes tend to produce fewer
rebels – whether Islamists or not. In Leon Trotsky’s words,
‘the mere existence of privations is not enough to cause an
insurrection, if it were the masses would be always in revolt’.45
Regarding Islamists specically, several scholars have shown
that the variations in Islamist violence in the Middle East does
42 Richards and Waterbury (1987)43 Hafez (2004) p. 23
44 McAdam (2001).
45 Trotsky (1961) p. 249.
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not correspond to variations in structural strains (especially
socioeconomic strains) across the region. The cases examined
include Algeria, Egypt, Jordan, Morocco, Saudi Arabia and
Tunisia.46
Another critique of these approaches is related to their
static nature and the validity of their vision of linear, causal
relationships. Islamists do not always turn to violent struggles
and radical ideologies whenever there is intense structural
strain. If that was the case, the overwhelming majority of
Islamist movements would be armed and violent.47 Also, even
when the choice is in favour of violent struggle and radicalism,
and even when the structural-psychological approachesare successful in explaining that choice in specic cases,
the explanation is limited to the nature of the grievances. In
other words, the purpose (dogmatic vs. pragmatic), the scale
(national vs. international), the scope (limited vs. expansive),
the intensity (sustained vs. sporadic) and the duration (brief vs.
protracted) of armed militancy, all associated with the violent
radicalisation process, are left unexplained by structural-
psychological approaches.
Finally, structural-psychological approaches, at least in their
classical versions, imply that structural change is required
for a shift towards de-radicalisation and moderation. Yet,
empirical evidence overwhelms that implication. Among the
“anomalies” are the cases of the Wasat Party and the Islamic
Group in Egypt, the Justice and Development Parties in Turkey
and Morocco, the Islamic Renaissance Party in Tajikistan, and
several individual and factional cases in the United Kingdom.
Structural-psychological approaches do not adequately explain
change under continuous structural strains, whether real or
perceived.
46 Hafez (2004).
47 The largest and the most popular of these movements are unarmed and
believe/participate in electoral politics, like the Muslim Brothers in Egypt and
many of their autonomous branches in Jordan, Libya, Iraq, Lebanon, Algeria,Sudan, Kuwait and other countries; the Islamic Salvation Front (FIS) in Algeria,
Islamic Renaissance Party (IRP) in Tajikistan, Islah (Reform) Party in Yemen,
and the National Outlook Movement and its associated parties in Turkey.
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Neither Structure, Nor Agent: Is It The Process?
Despite the aforementioned critiques, most of the literature
on Islamist movements in general, and Islamist radicalism inparticular, is conned to structural-psychological explanations.
Recently, alternative approaches have been advanced to
explain the causes of Islamist radicalism as well as the shift
towards moderation: these are under the umbrella of social
movement theory, and include resource mobilisation theory, the
political process model, and collective action framing.48
The political process approach was developed and utilised
by social movement theorists.
49
This approach addressesseveral limitations of the structural-psychological approaches,
especially its lack of dynamism and emphasis on causal
linearity. Regarding Islamist movements, the premise is that ‘it
is neither necessary for Islamists to be contended to become
moderate nor sufcient for Islamists to be deprived to become
rebellious’.50 The political process model emphasizes the
dynamism of the political environment and asserts the primacy
of process over structure. Resource mobilisation theory
emphasizes the availability and mobilisation of resources -
whether the resources are material, organisational, ideational or
institutional. For the proponents of these approaches:
social and political movements do not correspond
mechanistically to existing conditions; rather, they
continually mobilise resources, apply them in various
forms of collective action or ‘tactics’ and experience the
consequences of those strategies in a fully interrelated
process that also affects subsequent ‘rounds’ of
mobilisation, action and outcome.51
In this sense, Islamist politics is perceived as an intersection
of political opportunities, mobilisation strategies, as well as
mobilising frames and symbols that resonate with Muslim
cultures.52 To sum up, social movement theory attempts to
48 Yavuz, (2003); Hafez (2004); Wicktorowicz (2004); Wickham (2002, 2004).
49 Tilly (1978); McAdam (1982); DeNardo (1985); Tarrow (1996); McAdam et al.
(2001).50 Hafez (2004) pp. 19-20
51 Snyder and Kelly (1979) p. 219
52 Tilly (1997) pp. 151-157; McAdam et al. (2004)
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explain Islamist radicalism (and/or moderation) by investigating
the political environment in which Islamists operate, the
mobilisation structures through which they garner resources
and the ideological frames through which they legitimise theiractions.
The main critique of process-oriented approaches is that it
is a catchall – almost the polar opposite of parsimony. These
approaches fail to provide a manageable set of causal variables
that explain Islamist transformations. Terms like ‘political
environment’ could include many variables like domestic
institutions, regime types, international/regional actors,
geopolitics, political cultures and historical peculiarities. Usingthose broad terms might be useful in studying a single case
or a few cases in a relatively homogenous region. However,
producing cross-regional generalisable analysis will be difcult.
Even so, the interplay among the three dimensions of social
movement theory (political environment, mobilisation structures
and ideological frames) can be the key to understanding
change within Islamist movements, especially under continuity,
when some of, or most structural strains remain constant.
Another critique is that, despite the presence of ideological
frames as a main dimension in the approach, many scholars
assign that dimension a secondary, dependant role. The
assumption that Islamists use violent methods only when
all other options are exhausted53 represents a demotion of
ideology. In several cases, as well as in specic time-frames,
ideology became ‘too sacred’ to be violated and thus it
determined the strategic choices of a movement, regardless of
both the actual capabilities/resources of that movement and
the available strategic alternatives. Empirical examples include
the case of al-Jihad factions and their decisions, based on their
ideology, to militarily confront the powerful, well-established
Egyptian regime in the 1970’s during a period of relative
liberalisation.54 Similar examples supporting that argument
can be found in the Algerian case with the Sala Group for
Preaching and Combat (1998-2007) and in Saudi Arabia with
al-Qa‘ida in the Arabian Peninsula (1995–Present).
53 Shahin (1997); Hafez (2004)
54 Ideology, however, is still a variable. Al-Jihad has followed the IG’s lead and
initiated a de-radicalization process in 2007.
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On Moderation: Inclusion, Repression and
Political Process
The literature on moderation can be divided under four
broad theoretical categories: Inclusion-moderation, rule-and-
moderate, repression-moderation and political process. Under
each of these categories there are empirical cases that can be
interpreted as supportive. Therefore, this section discusses
some of the literature that focuses on empirical cases of
moderation.
Most of the empirical literature on moderation is post-2001,
but the rst of these empirical studies was published in
1993 and it discussed Hizbullah’s transformation from a
revolutionary militia to a political party that participated in the
1992 Lebanese parliamentary elections.55 Since moderation is
associated here with the practical abandonment of violence,
groups that have armed wings and use violence like Hamas
or Hizbullah will not be discussed, even though they accept
electoral democracy and participate in elections. More relevant
to the moderation process as dened here are the cases of
the Wasat Party in Egypt and the AKP in Turkey. Those two
groups broke away from relatively moderate, larger movements
namely the Egyptian Muslim Brothers and the Turkish National
Outlook Movement ( Milli Görüs Harekatı - MGH). The latter was
represented by the Welfare Party ( Rifah Partisi - RP) between
1983 and 1997 and by the Virtue Party ( Fazilet Partisi – FP) from
1998 until 2001.
The Inclusion-Moderation Hypothesis
The inclusion-moderation hypothesis is advanced by scholars
such as Michael Hudson,56 Gudrun Kramer in 1995 and Lisa
55 Hamzeh (1993); 11 years later, Hamzeh followed this article with a more
comprehensive study of Hizbullah’s transformations in his book In the Path of
Hizbullah (2004).
56 Although Hudson’s argument is nuanced. He argues for ‘limited
accommodation’ of Islamists a policy that was largely pursed in the Jordanian
case (between the Hashemite Regime and the Muslims Brothers/Islamic Action Front). He does not recommend full inclusion of Islamists in a political
process as a route towards moderation. See: Hudson (1995) pp. 235-241,
242-244.
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Anderson in 1997 and 2000. Generally, their works attempt to
hypothesise about the potential causes of moderation. These
works are based on modications/extensions of structural-
psychological approaches and they usually follow a linear,conditional ‘if…then…’ argument.
More specically, the inclusion-moderation hypothesis
reverses the frustration-aggression models and the repression-
radicalisation approach. The main argument is that if
Islamists are radicalised due to repression and exclusion,
then including them in the political process will have the
opposite effect: moderation.57 However, as shown before in
the previous sections, the relationship between repression andradicalisation, although valid in several cases, is not always
linear. Repression and exclusion could lead to moderation
as the cases of the Wasat Party and AKP demonstrate.58 In
addition, as argued by movement scholars, empirical evidence
shows that ‘it is neither necessary for Islamists to be contended
to become moderate nor sufcient for Islamists to be deprived
to become rebellious’.59 Following that line of argument, the
inclusion of Islamists can be a necessary but not a sufcient
condition for their moderation as argued by the inclusion-
moderation hypothesis. Moreover, most of the literature
that discussed the inclusion-moderation hypothesis left the
space between inclusion and moderation unaccounted for.
The mechanism(s) by which Islamists moderate, due to their
inclusion, were left largely unspecied.
Moderation Cases …and Critiques
In 1997, Glenn Robinson raised an important question:
can Islamists be Democrats?60 To answer that question, he
analyzed the behaviour of the Islamic Action Front (IAF), the
political wing of the MB in Jordan. He concluded that the IAF/
MB ‘has been consistently in the forefront of democratising
57 Anderson (1997) pp. 24-29.58 Wichkham (2004); Yavus (2006); Dagi (2006); Ashour and Unlucayakli (2006).
59 Hafez (2004) pp. 19-20.
60 Robinson (1997) p. 373
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The two authors have reached different conclusions about the
same case-study for denitional and contextual reasons.66 First,
while Schwedler denes moderation broadly as ‘the movement
from a relatively closed and rigid world view to one more openand tolerant of alternative perspectives’,67 Clark only mentions
the association between moderation and the willingness to
participate in a democratic system, without providing a clear
denition.68 The broad denition in Schwedler’s case, coupled
with denitional vagueness in Clark’s case, has contributed
to their reaching different conclusions about the moderation
process of the same group.
Also, the comparative contexts and issues-selection were twoother factors that contributed to the different conclusions.
Clark was looking at the IAF’s stances on the issues of honour
crimes, women parliamentary quotas and personal status
laws (particularly women’s divorce rights) within the HCCNOP
context. In other words, she was comparing the IAF’s positions
on issues of women rights to those of progressive, leftist and
secular parties, which are also members of the HCCNOP.
Therefore, her conclusion, that the IAF’s moderation is limited
and selective is not surprising. However, this conclusion was
inuenced by her selection of issues, context and comparative-
cases. Schwedler, on the other hand, is comparing the IAF
to the Islah party, which is relatively new to the democratic
process, has historical ties with Saudi Salas and former
Arab-Afghan Jihadists69 and operates in a more conservative
Yemeni context. In comparison to the Islah, the IAF will tend to
look moderate and therefore conrm the inclusion-moderation
thesis. Compared to leftist seculars on issues related to women
rights, it will not. Given that, more attention should be paid to
denitions, comparative contexts, and issue-selection when
studying and attempting to generalise about the moderation
process of Islamist movements.
66 There are also other reasons, mainly based on the causal variables the two
authors chose to use. I will not discuss them here due to space limitations.
67 Schwedler (2006) p. 3
68 Clark points out that Islamists and secular liberals have different
understandings of democracy, but she does not elaborate on their
perspectives. See: Clark (2006) p. 542.69 For example, Abdul Majid Zendani, the leader of the Isah Party, was the Emir
of the Arab-Afghans for a short period following the assassination of Abdullah
Azzam, the ‘godfather’ of the Arab-Afghans.
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The Rule-and-Moderate Hypothesis
A related hypothesis to ‘inclusion-moderation’ is the ‘rule-
and-moderate’ one advanced by Saad Eddine Ibrahim.70
Thisis based on his research trips in the Palestinian territories,
Lebanon and Israel as well as his interactions with the Egyptian
MB. Ibrahim initially hypothesised that the closer Islamists
are to political power in a democratic process, the more they
will moderate their behaviour.71 To support the hypothesis
empirically, Ibrahim cites rhetorical and behavioural changes
towards moderation within groups like Palestinian Hamas,
Lebanese Hizbullah and the MB during electoral processes and
after electoral victories.
72
Much like the ‘inclusion-moderation,’ theory the ‘rule-and-
moderate’ hypothesis has some validity. Borrowing from
Givonai Sartori’s work on European political parties,73 one
can argue that most Islamist movements have the status
of ‘permanent opposition’. Given the lack of accountability
and governmental responsibilities, these movements tend
to promise their supporters more than they can realistically
give them and use vague symbolic slogans that resonate well
culturally, such as ‘Islam is the solution’. However, once close
to, or in ofce, these movements will need to moderate their
behaviour and act responsibly if they want to avoid political or
economic disasters and keep their base of support.
Despite the argument advanced above, a main problem with
the ‘moderate-and-rule’ hypothesis, in addition to the critiques
directed at ‘inclusion-moderation’, is that at the core of the
argument there is an assumption that the grassroots of the
Islamist movement and its supporters prefer moderate policies.
Therefore, if the politicians/leaders do not pursue a moderate
agenda, these supporters will not vote for them. This is not
always true as with the case of Algerian FIS demonstrations,
for example.74 In addition, there are several cases that suggest
the opposite of the hypothesis: Islamists pursue a more radical
70 Ibrahim (2006, 2007a, 2007b).
71 Ibrahim (2007) p. 13.
72 Ibid; Ibrahim (2006) p. 1373 Sartori (1966)
74 Shahin (1997) p. 160; I also demonstrate this through the examination of the
de-radicalization cases in Algeria and Egypt in the following sections.
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rhetoric whenever they are closer to ofce. In Algeria, one can
argue that after the FIS won the municipal elections in 1990,
it did not moderate its behaviour or rhetoric. For example,
Ali Belhaj, deputy leader of the FIS, asserted that he did notbelieve in democracy,75 despite the fact that the FIS was closer
to power through a democratic process!
The Repression-Moderation Hypothesis
The ‘repression-moderation’ hypothesis emerged more
recently after witnessing the transformations of the Egyptian
Wasat , the MB and the AKP towards a more liberal Islamist
trend under continuous structural strains. This approachargues that applying pressure on Islamists coupled with
limited accommodation in the electoral process will lead to
their moderation. The works of Mona El-Ghobashy (2005) on
the Egyptian MB and Ihsan Dagi (2006) on the Turkish AKP
represent this line of argument. It is important to note here
that the works focusing on ‘repression-moderation’ are only
attempting to explain a single case-study, while ‘inclusion-
moderation’ is aiming toward a more general hypothesis.
In her study, El-Ghobashy traces the transformation of
the Egyptian MB76 from a ‘highly secretive, hierarchical,
anti-democratic organisation led by anointed elders into a
modern, multivocal political association steered by educated,
savvy professionals not unlike activists of the same age in
rival political parties’.77 She mainly attributes that change
to the MB’s participation in, and experience with, rugged
Egyptian electoral politics. El-Ghobashy argues that within the
Egyptian authoritarian context, the MB had to moderate their
75 Belhaj (1992) p. 34; Ayachi (1993) p. 170
76 The Egyptian MB represents the spiritual leadership of the other MB
international branches. The decision of the General Guide of the Egyptian
branch is perceived as non-binding recommendations to the other branches.
See: Al-Za‘atra (2005) p. 6.
77 El-Ghobashy (2005) p. 374; El-Ghobashy has overstated her case a bit here.
It is true that the MB was secretive in the period between the mid-1950s
and early 1970s, but this was mainly a reaction to survive under Nasser’s
repression. It is also true that the MB had a secret armed wing that primed
in the 1940s. However, the organization as a whole did not adopt a secretive
policy. In addition, their political behaviour can hardly be interpreted as‘antidemocratic’. Hasan al-Banna, the founder of the MB, participated in
parliamentary elections as early as 1942. See: Mitchell (1969) p. 307. In most
of their history, the MB was neither ‘highly secretive’ nor ‘antidemocratic’.
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behaviour to be able to fend-off state repression and maintain
their ‘inuence and relevance with the public and inuential
international actors’.78 She calls this ‘self-preservation’.
Ihsan Dagi advances a very similar argument when he
investigates the causes behind the AKP’s departure from
mainstream Turkish Islamism as represented by the MGH and
its moderation of rhetoric and behaviour. In a volume edited
by Hakan Yavus (2006) about the AKP,79 Dagi argues that
after the 1997 ‘soft’ coup, the insecurity of the AKP led it to
internalise the human rights discourse and the pro-democracy
position. In other words, the pressures and threats from the
military establishment have led to the internalisation of liberalbehaviour/ideas and, therefore, to the moderation of the AKP.80
The two aforementioned case-studies demonstrate that
moderation of both behaviour and ideology could develop
under repressive conditions. However, the main problem with
the ‘repression-moderation’ approach is that it does not explain
why repression sometimes leads to radicalisation (Algerian
FIS, Tajik IRP) and why it leads to moderation (Turkish AKP,
Egyptian Wasat) in other cases? This is one of the reasons
that the ‘repression-moderation’ approach is limited to few
case-studies. Even within these case-studies, the explanation
provided by this approach is not comprehensive. The 1995-
1996 military trials for civilian MB activists in Egypt and the
1997 ‘soft-coup’ against the MGH Islamists in Turkey were not
the rst incidents of repression. The MB activists had been
objects of state repression since the late 1940s and the MGH’s
since the 1970s. Given this timeline, why did they relatively
moderate only in the mid-1990s and 2000s? State repression
alone cannot provide an answer for this question.
78 El-Ghobashy (2006) p. 394
79 The volume investigates the reasons behind the AKP electoral victory in
2002 and assesses the possibilities for another victory in 2007. Most of the
contributors predict a 2007 electoral victory if the AKP continues its relentlesspursuit of the EU membership as well as if it continues to moderate its Islamist
discourse.
80 Dagi (2006) p. 103
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The Political Process Approach
As I argued above in the radicalisation section, structural-
psychological approaches can not account for change underconstant structural strains. Several empirical studies on
moderation have shown that this kind of change could occur.
Among those studies is the one done by Carrie Wickham
about the Egyptian Wasat Islamists. Using a more dynamic
political process approach, Wickham provides a framework
for analyzing the process of Islamist moderation. According
to Wickham, the two variables that have led to the Wasat
ideological moderation are political learning and strategic
calculations, much as the comparative theory would predict.She notes that ‘the Wasat party is interesting precisely because
it is a hard case, in which the precipitants of moderation are
weak and the deterrents to moderation are strong’.81 Wickham
concludes that ‘the Wasat Islamists revised their ultimate goals
and took a public stand in favour of values associated with
democratic civil culture when the regime was not democratic’.82
By that conclusion, she demonstrates the limitations of the
structural-psychological approaches, the advantages of the
political process approach, as well as a main problem with the
‘inclusion-moderation’ hypothesis.
Moderation, however, is not the only process that merits
explanation, and moreover the Wasat party is not the only
Islamist ‘hard case’ that moderated under adverse or
discouraging structural conditions, as shown in the following
section. Also, the variables mentioned by Wickham need
further explanation. What causes Islamists to initially revise their
strategic calculations and political knowledge? The research
direction of this paper is moving in this way, mainly to address
the causes that lead groups as different as the IG, al-Jihad, the
MB and the AIS to rethink their ideologies and behaviours.
On De-Radicalisation: A Gap in the Literature
Between the two ends of the Islamist spectrum, taking-up arms
and aiming for sweeping change (violent radicalisation) on
81 Wickham (2004) p. 223
82 Wickham (2004) p. 224
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one end and accepting/participating in a democratic process
(moderation) on the other, there is a point when an Islamist
movement decides to abandon violence behaviourally, de-
legitimise it ideologically, and act on that by dismantling itsarmed units organisationally. On that spectrum, this is the point
where the de-radicalisation process starts.83
As shown in the above review, the literature on Islamist
movements has attempted to explain the two processes of
radicalisation and moderation. Islamist de-radicalisation,
as dened above is neither addressed nor theorised about
sufciently in the literature. Due to the importance of that
process for both academic and policy purposes, the causesand the dynamics of de-radicalisation of armed Islamist
movements, factions and individuals should have a place in
future research agendas.
The Phenomenon of De-Radicalisation: Historical andContemporary Dynamics
In late 1951, Hassan al-Hudaybi, the second General Guide of
the Muslim Brothers in Egypt decided to dismantle the main
armed wing of the Society that was known at the time as al-
Nizam al-Khass (Special Apparatus – SA).84 The leadership of
al-Hudaybi was already being challenged, and the decision
was extremely controversial within the movement. It led to
further factionalisation and internal violence within the Society.
Ultimately, it took approximately two decades for the leadership
to dismantle the SA and its offshoots completely. Since the
early 1970’s, the MB has abandoned violence against national
regimes, and has de-legitimised and prohibited that type of
violence by ideological and theological arguments. Additionally,
the leadership of the MB in Egypt has also dismantled all
of its armed units. These conditions indicate a successful,
comprehensive de-radicalisation process that took place on the
behavioural, ideological and organisational levels.85
In a very similar but shorter process, al-Gama‘a al-Islamiyya
(Islamic Group – IG) – the largest armed Islamist movement
83 Ashour (2007, 2009)
84 Ashour (2009) pp. 64-74
85 Ibid., p. 64
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in Egypt during the 1980’s and 1990’s – declared a unilateral
ceasere in July 1997 that surprised observers, ofcials and
even many IG members and commanders.86 The ceasere
declaration contradicted the militant literature of the group, theprevious vows of its leaders to continue the armed struggle
until it had topple the Mubarak regime and the increasingly
violent tactics used by the IG afliates since the late 1970’s. In
2002, the leadership of the IG not only dismantled its armed
wings, but also renounced its radical literature, published
new books and replaced its curricula with those of the
relatively moderate Muslim Brothers.87 Members of the shura
(consultative) council of the IG issued several books explaining
its new non-violent ideology. As with the Muslim Brothers,this seemed to indicate a de-radicalisation process that had
taken place not only on the behavioural (strategic/tactical)
level but also on the ideological level. By 2007, the IG’s de-
radicalisation process looked to have been consolidated:
no armed operations since 1999, no signicant splits within
the movement and around 25 volumes authored by the IG
leaders to support their new ideology with both theological and
rational arguments. Two of the volumes were critiques of al-
Qa‘ida’s behaviour88 and a third was a critique of the ‘clash of
civilizations’ hypothesis, arguing instead for cultural dialogue.89
The drafting of these volumes by the same movement that
co-assassinated President Anwar al-Sadat for signing the
Egyptian-Israeli Peace Treaty was a signicant development.
This process of de-radicalisation removed more than 15,000 IG
militants from the Sala-Jihadi camp currently led by al-Qa‘ida.
In 2007, al-Jihad Organization, the second largest armed
organisation in Egypt, with strong ties to al-Qa‘ida, had also
initiated a de-radicalisation process. The process is being led
by the former emir (commander) of al-Jihad (1987-1993) and
al-Qa‘ida’s ideologue, Dr. Sayyid Imam al-Sharif (alias ‘Abd
al-Qadir Ibn ‘Abd al-‘Aziz as well as Dr. Fadl). To recant his old
views, al-Sharif authored a two new book entitled Document
for Guiding Jihad in Egypt and the World and The Uncovering.
In addition, al-Sharif and other al-Jihad commanders toured
Egyptian prisons between February and April 2007 to meet
86 Ibid, pp. 90-115; Ashour (2007) p. 59687 Ashour (2009) p. 4; Zinah (2003) p. 16
88 Zuhdi et al. (2002, 2003)
89 Ibrahim et al. (2005) pp. 225-247
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with their followers and discuss the de-radicalisation process.
That process has been only partially successful however, as
three factions within al-Jihad still refuse to uphold it. These
factions also refuse to leave the organisation and one of themis in alliance with al-Qa‘ida. The process is thus still ongoing at
present.90
In Algeria, similar de-radicalising transformations occurred in
1997. Like the IG of Egypt, the self-declared armed wing of
the FIS,91 known as the Islamic Salvation Army (AIS), declared
a unilateral ceasere. The ceasere led to disarmament and
demilitarisation processes that aimed for the reintegration of
the AIS members as well as other armed Islamist factions into Algeria’s civil ranks. The demilitarisation process included
subgroups from the notorious GIA and the GSPC.92 These
groups and factions issued several communiqués to explain
and legitimise their decisions to dismantle their armed wings.
Unlike the Egyptian groups however, the Algerian groups did
not produce any ideological literature to reconstruct a new
ideology.
The phenomenon of ‘de-radicalisation’ is not only conned to
the countries previously mentioned. In the 2000’s, it took place
in several other countries, albeit on a smaller scale. These de-
radicalisation cases include Libyan, Saudi, Yemeni, Jordanian,
Tajik, Malaysian and Indonesian armed Islamist groups,
factions, and individuals.93 Additionally, The Egyptian de-
radicalisation processes had international repercussions. For
example, the transformations of the IG have inuenced several
members of the British Islamic Liberation Party and caused
them to abandon the Party’s radical ideology.94 In Libya, the
Fighting Islamic Group (FIG) modelled their de-radicalisation
90 Ashour (2009) pp. 102-108; By early 2008, most of al-Jihad factions had
joined the de-radicalization process. The main exceptions were the faction
led by Ayman al-Zawahri, which joined al-Qa‘ida, and two small factions
in Egyptian prisons whose refusals were based on their rejection of the
ideological component of the process. See: Jahin (2007) p. 12
91 In general, I shall use the acronym by which an Islamist group is best known,
regardless of which language it is based on. Especially in the cases of
Algerian, Moroccan and Tunisian groups, the acronyms are based on their
French initials. Otherwise, acronyms are largely based on English initials.
92 Now the GSPC is known as al-Qa‘ida in the Islamic Countries of al-Maghreb(QICM).
93 Ashour (2009) pp. 136-146
94 Nawaz (2007) p. 6
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process after that of the Egyptian IG and recently published
a book in which they ideologically and theologically de-
legitimised violence against national regimes. In Saudi Arabia,
government-sponsored al-Munasaha (Advising) Programs,as well as interventions from independent Islamic scholars,
succeed in de-radicalising mainly individuals and small groups
who supported or were loosely linked to the al-Qa‘ida. In
Tajikistan, the IRP that led the United Tajikistani Opposition
(UTO) in the civil war of 1992-1997, again led the UTO into a
fragile peace agreement with the Tajik government. Similar to
the IG in Egypt and the AIS and other armed groups in Algeria,
the IRP called for ‘Jihad’ in 1992 and then for a ceasere,
a compromise and a peaceful resolution of the conict in1997. In Indonesia, Singapore, and Malaysia, government-
sponsored de-radicalisation programs aimed particularly
to convince of mid-ranking commanders and grassroots
of the Jama‘a Islammiyya (JI) to abandon violence and de-
legitimise it ideologically. The de-radicalisation processes of
these movements had removed tens of thousands of former
militants from the ranks of al-Qa‘ida’s supporters and acted as
disincentives for would-be militants. Despite that, there is not
sufcient investigation of the causes and the dynamics of that
process in the literature. This is surprising in light of the great
interest in explaining Islamism and the huge volume of literature
produced after the 9/11 attacks.
Conclusion: Old Themes, New Patterns
In the literature on Islamist movements, radicalisation is the
most explored process of change. This is probably due to the
fact that it is associated with several important events that
sparked Western and international interest beginning in the
1970’s with the Iranian revolution, moving into the 1980’s with
the assassination of President Sadat in Egypt and continuing
into the 1990’s and the new millennium with events all over
the world from the Algerian civil war to the terrorist attacks
of 9/11 in the US, 7/7 in the UK, and 3/11 in Spain. Despite
that coverage, radicalisation was mostly investigated through
the lenses of structural-psychological approaches with all of
their aforementioned limitations. Recently, radicalisation was
explored through the more dynamic social movement theory
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approach, which promises a better understanding of that
phenomenon.
Compared to radicalisation, fewer works have addressed theprocess of moderation within Islamist movements. The process
itself is relatively new, nonetheless investigating it by reversing
structural-psychological approaches as well as through the
social movement approach offered several important insights,
as demonstrated for example by Lisa Anderson’s works (1997,
2000) as well as by Wickham’s study of the Wasat Party and
the MB .
Given that de-radicalisation processes are the leastaddressed in the literature, future research agendas on
Islamist movements should focus on that new and on-going
phenomenon. The areas of investigation can analyse the
causes behind the process as well as the conditions under
which this process might be successful.95 Aside from these
two essential research topics, there is also a specic type of
interaction between de-radicalised groups/individuals and
radical ones that merits attention: the ‘domino effect’. De-
radicalised Islamist groups often interact with other violent
groups operating in the same context under similar conditions
and, importantly, in many cases the former inuence the latter.
For example, the lead taken by the IG and the interaction with
its leaders has facilitated and inuenced the de-radicalisation
process of al-Jihad Organization in Egypt.
Finally, with several armed Islamist movements in more than
seven countries having initiated de-radicalisation processes,
the question of whether or not this is going to be a trend in
armed Islamism arises. In other words, will these processes of
ideological, behavioural and organisational de-radicalisation
turn into an ‘end of history’ for sala-jihadism and armed
Islamism, or will de-radicalisation reversals and/or radicalisation
patterns dominate the future? Despite the existence of several
cases of de-radicalised armed Islamist movements, there are
also concurrent trends of violent radicalisation – most notably
in Iraq, Algeria, Somalia, Afghanistan, Pakistan and even parts
of Europe and North America. Therefore, it is still too early to
predict the dominant global trends in Islamist transformations.
However, the comprehensive transformations that occurred and
95 Ashour (2009) p. 136
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30
the current debates between former al-Qa‘ida ideologues and
al-Qa‘ida leaders might be the initial signs of an ‘end of history’
process for many sala-jihadist groups and factions. Therefore,
analysing the causes and dynamics of de-radicalisation iscrucial for both academics and policy-makers.
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31
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